For decades, jobsite safety has depended on manual inspections, incident reports, and after-the-fact analysis. Here at Constructech, we have covered as systems have moved from paper to Microsoft Excel to mobile apps, and now to something even more intelligent. With the rise of AI (artificial intelligence) and the IoT (Internet of Things), we have more tech tools at our fingertips than ever before. Driven by AI, sensors, and more, these high-tech systems can see risks as they develop, interpret patterns, and intervene before incidents occur.
Let’s consider one example. AI-powered video and monitoring systems can now detect unsafe behaviors—like missing protective equipment or dangerous proximity to machinery—and trigger immediate alerts or coaching. Instead of relying solely on supervisors to catch every risk, companies are augmenting human oversight with continuous, data-driven insights.
One example comes from Suffolk. The company is using video-based behavioral modification and coaching analytics to help protect workers and reduce claims on construction jobsites across the United States.
This follows Suffolk’s participation in a multi-year pilot of the cameras-plus-coaching technology conducted by Zurich North America and Zurich Resilience Solutions. Across the pilot, Zurich reported a more than 50% reduction in workers compensation claim frequency, a key indicator of worker safety, on sites using the cameras-plus-coaching combination.
Doug Ware, senior vice president risk management, Suffolk, even points out Suffolk saw four times fewer claims and 10 times lower incurred losses on projects in the pilot.
Now, let’s be clear. The IoT is not new. I remember covering Skanska’s use of Smartvid.io, which is a cloud-based platform for analyzing photos and videos in industrial environments, a decade ago. What has changed is AI has gotten smarter and the pace of change has sped up.
What makes this moment particularly significant is not just the technology itself, but how it is reshaping safety culture. These systems are increasingly being positioned not as surveillance tools, but as coaching platforms—helping workers learn safer behaviors in realtime.
When implemented thoughtfully, they create a feedback loop where data informs training, and training reinforces safer habits on the ground. Success, however, hinges on trust. Companies must be transparent about how data is used and ensure that technology supports workers rather than penalizes them.
What makes this so exciting is that we’re watching the construction industry push even deeper into AI — not just digital AI on screens, but physical AI operating in the real world. As we’ve been discussing, this technology uses AI to interpret what’s happening around it through cameras, sensors, and human movement. And here’s the nuance that really matters, it’s not a robot doing the work, but it is AI acting on physical environments.
That’s the leap. Construction sites are getting safer because the environment itself is becoming smarter and constantly learning, always watching, and actively protecting the people who build our world. This is AI that can perceive the physical world, analyze realtime human movement, detect risk in motion, and trigger immediate actions. That’s exactly what we mean by physical AI: intelligence that doesn’t just live in software, but lives in the environment around us.

Looking ahead, the convergence of AI, wearables, and digital safety platforms points to a fully connected jobsite of the future—one where risks are predicted, not just recorded. As labor shortages persist and projects grow more complex, the ability to scale safety expertise through technology will become a competitive differentiator. There is so much more to come in digital and physical AI. And we can all thank the IoT for this leap forward.
Want to tweet about this article? Use hashtags #construction #IoT #sustainability #AI #5G #cloud #edge #futureofwork #infrastructure #safety
